"We have what the furniture store said was a breakfront that is identical to what you called a hutch, except it has two small doored compartments (each about the size of a box that could hold a gallon milk jug). "

A breakfront is a type of furniture, not a description of a piece itself. To give you an analogy, if I walked into my kitchen and said I had a side-by-side, and you responded that you'd call that item a refrigerator, we'd both be right. Then I could walk into my living room and point out another side-by-side, which holds the TV. "Breakfront" means that it's got a specific shape to the front of it, so one could have a breakfront hutch and a breakfront china cabinet and while it would be confusing, you could legitimately call them both a "breakfront" for short.

It's probably here that I should mention that, at the age of thirty-nine, I have never been furniture shopping. Mom and I always lived together, and it was her province to buy the furnishings, and she only passed recently (has it really been FOUR years?!), so we've still got the old furniture. But we are going to move soon, so when we do I'll be buying furniture for the first time.

I was watching this beautiful video and it made me wonder: how do you write down dance choreography? I mean, the other arts all have written forms: there's a standard way to notate a play, film script, sheet music, etc. But it seems like even if you wrote down the technical terms for the dance moves, you'd still need a way to say "You do this one facing this way, then turn and do this thing with your arms while your feet are doing this other thing, and then you try to express this emotion while doing a whatchamacallit going that direction." Do you just have to videotape everything? And what did people do before videotape?

I was watching this beautiful video and it made me wonder: how do you write down dance choreography? I mean, the other arts all have written forms: there's a standard way to notate a play, film script, sheet music, etc. But it seems like even if you wrote down the technical terms for the dance moves, you'd still need a way to say "You do this one facing this way, then turn and do this thing with your arms while your feet are doing this other thing, and then you try to express this emotion while doing a whatchamacallit going that direction." Do you just have to videotape everything? And what did people do before videotape?

You can write it down. All the great ballets you see are written, although they may be adapted for a particular performance/director. Dance movements on stage have a language just as much as play and film movements (Walk, stage left. Leap, stage right. Run, centre). I have no idea of the names of all the steps, though.

Logged

You are only young once. After that you have to think up some other excuse.

I was watching this beautiful video and it made me wonder: how do you write down dance choreography? I mean, the other arts all have written forms: there's a standard way to notate a play, film script, sheet music, etc. But it seems like even if you wrote down the technical terms for the dance moves, you'd still need a way to say "You do this one facing this way, then turn and do this thing with your arms while your feet are doing this other thing, and then you try to express this emotion while doing a whatchamacallit going that direction." Do you just have to videotape everything? And what did people do before videotape?

You can write it down. All the great ballets you see are written, although they may be adapted for a particular performance/director. Dance movements on stage have a language just as much as play and film movements (Walk, stage left. Leap, stage right. Run, centre). I have no idea of the names of all the steps, though.

I was watching this beautiful video and it made me wonder: how do you write down dance choreography? I mean, the other arts all have written forms: there's a standard way to notate a play, film script, sheet music, etc. But it seems like even if you wrote down the technical terms for the dance moves, you'd still need a way to say "You do this one facing this way, then turn and do this thing with your arms while your feet are doing this other thing, and then you try to express this emotion while doing a whatchamacallit going that direction." Do you just have to videotape everything? And what did people do before videotape?

It looks similar to what stage managers do for plays. Symbols and diagrams and arrows and such. It's called "dance notation"

I don't know if I have a Mac or a PC , and I don't seem to have the keys anybody's mentioned. I'm sorry, thanks anyway .

No worries! We're here to help!

I'm betting you have a PC.

In which case the "alt" key is on the bottom row, left side, below the "shift" key (maybe 2 keys over?).

Hold down the "alt" key, then press "0163" -- on my work computer (a tower), you need to use the number keypad, not the top row of numbers (not sure how it works on a lap top, sorry! I don't have a PC to test. )

If it's a Mac, there will be a small apple icon at the far left side on the top-most menu bar.

If you do have a mac, the "option" key is also on the bottom row. Hold down the "option" key and hit the number "3" = £

If I didn't explain it clearly enough, please let us know . . . that's what this thread is all about, asking stupid questions and getting answers without feeling foolish.